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Social Mobility

Yaojun Li author Anthony Heath author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:John Wiley and Sons Ltd

Published:15th Dec '23

Should be back in stock very soon

This hardback is available in another edition too:

Social Mobility cover

Social mobility has long been one of the central topics of sociology. It has been the subject of major theoretical contributions from the earliest generations of scholars, as well as being of persistent political interest and concern. Social mobility is frequently used as a key measure of fairness and social justice, given the central role that modern liberal democracies give to equality of opportunity. More pragmatically, policymakers often consider it a force for economic growth and social integration.
  
However, discussions of social mobility have increasingly become dominated by advanced statistical techniques, impenetrable to all but specialists in quantitative methods. In this concise and lucid book, Anthony Heath and Yaojun Li cut through the technical literature to provide an eye-opening account of the ideas, debates and realities that surround this important social phenomenon. Their book illuminates the major patterns and trends in rates of social mobility, and their drivers, in contemporary western and emerging societies, ultimately enabling readers to understand and engage with this perennially relevant social issue. 

“This is a very interesting, well written, comprehensive and accessible survey of a complex topic – I would recommend it!”
Alun Francis, Chair of the Social Mobility Commission

“Heath and Li are impressively comprehensive in their discussion of social mobility. They examine occupational change from the medieval period onwards, review insights generated by the latest studies using tax data and provide fresh statistics on the historically understudied issues of mobility by gender, race and migration status.”
Jo Blanden, University of Surrey

“Social Mobility is a hugely important book on a topic that matters to us all. It is historical, comparative and interdisciplinary in its review of patterns and trends with due regard to gender and race and ethnicity. The discussion on who gets ahead and why is simply excellent.”
Fiona Devine, University of Manchester

ISBN: 9780745683065

Dimensions: 218mm x 142mm x 25mm

Weight: 408g

204 pages